CS295J/Literature week 2
< CS295J
- Provides a brief history of Cognitive Science and HCI, then compares the effectiveness of the aforementioned theories in aiding design and development. (Owner : Steven)
- Dimensional Overlap: Cognitive Basis for Stimulus-Response compatibility Kornblum-1990-DOC
- Provides a model of stimulus-response compatibility, the finding that people respond faster when the proper response to a stimulus is similar to the stimulus itself. (Owner : Adam)
- A pattern approach to interaction design Borchers-2001-PAI
- A highly-cited work on the development of a language for defining design patterns for use in interface development, with an emphasis on communication between application developers and application domain experts. E J Kalafarski 16:37, 3 February 2009 (UTC)
- Shneiderman's "Eight Golden Rules of Interface Design" Schneiderman-1987-ERD
- 8 basic HCI rules to keep in mind. (Gideon)
- Distributed Cognition: Toward a New Foundation for Human-Computer Interaction Research Hollan-2000-DCF
- Provides a framework for researching HCI within a distributed cognition perspective. (Gideon)
- What is beautiful is usable Tractinsky-2000-WBU
- This is a highly cited and interesting article which examines the relationships between users' initial perceptions of a system's interface with regard to aesthetics and their perceptions of that system's usability before and after use. (Owner : Ian)
- Introduces the notion of Relational Markov Models (RMMs), a construct that extends traditional Markov Models by imposing a relational hierarchy on the state space. This abstraction allows for learning and inference on very large state spaces with only sparse training data. These methods are evaluated with respect to Adaptive Web Interfaces, but I believe the general RMM idea can be applied in many other HCI settings. (Owner : Trevor)
- I found this article (written by Peter Wegner of the Brown CS Dept. and cited over 500 times) analogous to Fred Brooks' Toolsmith paper in that it is a seminal viewpoint piece that lends credibility to interaction research as a bona fide science (interaction takes on many meanings here, but nearly all interpretations apply to HCI). Wegner describes how the Turing Test breaks down when interaction enters the picture, and introduces the notion of an Interaction Machine in its place. I found this quote particularly interesting:
- "The irreducibility of interaction to algorithms enhances the intellectual legitimacy of computer science as a discipline distinct from mathematics and, by clarifying the nature of empirical models of computation, provides a technical rationale for calling computer science a science." (Owner : Trevor)